NOME

NOME operates between the realms of art, politics and technology. By exploring the nodes of the entanglements between these fields, the gallery aims to raise critical awareness regarding the crucial issues facing our age.

The gallery represents international emerging and mid-career artists such as James Bridle, Jacob Appelbaum, Matthew Plummer-Fernandez, Ralf Baecker and Nils Völker, whose works have already been shown at major art institutions like MoMA, New York; Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and ZKM Karlsruhe.

Their respective practices engage diverse disciplines, including computer science, writing and visual communication, and involve a broad range of media.

With the solo show 'Overexposed' by conceptual artist Paolo Cirio NOME inaugurates its exhibition programme.
With his public intervention 'Overexposed', artist Paolo Cirio disseminates unauthorized pictures of high-ranking U.S. intelligence officials throughout major cities. Cirio obtained...

With Hard Copy, NOME presents Matthew Plummer-Fernandez’s first solo exhibition.
The show challenges familiar notions of copyright and questions the point at which an original copyright ends and where a newfound ‘copyleft’ freedom might begin.
Plummer-Fernandez shows a series of new...

NOME is pleased to announce that the gallery will relocate to Kreuzberg in April 2017, after two years of activity.
The new space will open with a solo show by James Bridle.
In "Failing to Distinguish Between a Tractor Trailer and the Bright White Sky", James Bridle (b. 1980, UK) explores...

NOME is pleased to present Kirsten Stolle’s first solo show in Europe, “Proceed at Your Own Risk”.
Kirsten Stolle (b. 1967, USA) explores the relationships between economy and ecology in her subversive collage works, which take ideas and imagery from post-war America as a
springboard into...

With 'The Glomar Response' NOME presents James Bridle’s first solo show in Germany.
The ‘Glomar Response’ was formulated in 1975 by the U.S. Government, and refers to the prerogative of power to “neither confirm nor deny” the existence of information.
In the shadow of this statement is...

NOME is pleased to present the first solo show of Chinese artist Xiyadie in Europe, curated by Hera Chan.
"Cut Sleeve, Split Peach" shows a selection of Xiyadie’s works, traditional paper-cuts that are tenderly snipped and died by hand. The exhibition title originates in two early queer love...

NOME is pleased to present the most recent solo show „Oscillations“ by Dutch artist Joris Strijbos.
Strijbos shows two kinetic light sculptures - "Axon" and "Homeostase" that are the result of a broader research on artificial life and generative composition. Inspired by early cybernetics and...

'Bits and Pieces' transforms the gallery into an almost living organism through the choreographed movements of ordinary objects. The 108 motorized spheres in the installation are individually opened and closed, creating a poetic performance of orchestrated activity. The floating, colorful spheres...

Quayola’s 'Iconographies' are part of an ongoing project that analyzes Renaissance and Baroque paintings through computational methods. The artist transforms religious and mythological scenes into complex abstract formations, creating alternative versions of the old masterpieces by removing the...

NOME is pleased to bring the group show „Evidentiary Realism“, curated by Paolo Cirio, to Berlin after its successful start in New York. The exhibition features artists engaged in investigative, forensic, and documentary work.
On display are works by Sadie Barnette, Josh Begley, James Bridle,...

NOME is pleased to present Order+Noise (Interface I), a new installation by Ralf Baecker.
Like a tug of war, the installation Order+Noise (Interface I) negotiates the boundary between two interacting systems. Motors, strings and elastic bands are set in motion by the random signals of...

NOME is pleased to announce the first solo show by Nora Al-Badri and Nikolai Nelles, "Not a Single Bone", which will be opened on 8 September 2017.
The project "Fossil Futures" results from research (funded by Haus der Kulturen der Welt), at the Tendaguru Beds in Tanzania, a former German...

PersonMy work mainly revolves around perception and movement. I work in several fields as a way for me to investigate the physical world and the perception of it, but more often than others the specific mediums intertwine and merge with one another making it hard to define them as being one or the...